And you will get a list of what would be updated with the testing repo, and then you can disable it again if it doesn’t return a result that one can work with.
Let’s say you want to test a drive that is mounted on /tmp… you just cd into that directory and you can use my example.
You can use
$> df -h
or
$> mount
to check how your drive is mounted in the OS
Most ”default ” installations will have 1-4 partitions and / being partition 3 or 4.
So if you look at the mount command and / is /dev/sdX3 (where X can be a-z depending on how many drives you have connected) and no other mounts are in the output then every directory under / is on that drive… so you can run my example from your home-directory if you fancy that.
The cool thing about rsync is that it goes ”BRRRRRRRRR!” like a warthog… the plane… and it can saturate the receiving drive or array depending on your network and client. And getting 180 with rsync.. on a SATA drive, can’t really hope for more.
Oh I know, but there is some things that are objectively evil, like killing children. And since their god is omnibenevolent and all knowing, then there is no point in killing children, unless your god is either evil or not omnibenevolent, you can’t have both.
But yeah, there are things you just have to accept that these extremists just take for granted, like they are so chosen/special that they can have the cake and eat it.
Yeah, all of a sudden… moths everywhere